customary law and womens rights in kenya
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Customary Law and Women’s Rights in Kenya
Dr. Winifred Kamau, Ph.D
1. Introduction: The Need to Reconcile Customary Law and Women’s Rights
Kenya is a legally plural state where several different legal and normative systems operate
alongside each other. The interaction of legal systems is complex and often engenders conflict
and competition. This paper deals with the relationship between customary law and women’s
human rights in Kenya, and examines the ways in which conflicts between the different legal
systems impact on the human rights of women in Kenya. The paper argues that there is need to
find ways of reconciling conflicts between customary law and women’s human rights in order to
enhance women’s ability to actualize their rights. This paper also explores avenues that may be
available to utilize customary law for the benefit of women.
Customary law plays a significant role in the lives of Kenyans. Customary norms and
practices pervade people’s relationships and dealings with one another. This is particularly so in
the context of family relations. Debates about culture in Africa have largely focused on women
in the context of the family and on the impact of custom on their enjoyment of rights. The
family has been described as the site of struggle over symbols, entitlement to resources and
decision-making.1 It has aptly been observed that family law is: “the litmus test in any society
with regard to legal norms and the status of women. It is also the area where law, ethnicity and
ideology with regard to the rights of women merge to become a powerful ideological force.”2
Customary law plays a crucial role in the maintenance of cultural norms about the place of
women in the family and society.
For Kenyan women, custom is particularly important as it defines their identity within
society, and mediates their family relationships, entitlements and access to resources. In
addition, informal justice systems which constitute the most accessible forms of dispute
resolution utilize localized norms derived from customary law.
1 Fareda Banda, Women, Law and Human Rights: An African Perspective (Oxford: Hart Publishing House, 2005).2 Radhika Coomaraswamy, “To Bellow Like a Cow: Women, Ethnicity and the Discourse of Rights”, in Rebecca
Cook, ed. Human Rights of Women: National and International Perspectives (Philadelphia: University ofPhiladelphia Press, 1994) 39 at 48.
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Customary law may be defined as consisting of the unwritten norms and practices of
small-scale communities which dates back from pre-colonial times but has undergone
transformations due to colonialism and capitalism. It is localized in nature and is as diverse as
the communities involved, although there is general consensus on certain fundamental
principles.3 It is unwritten and is characterized by dynamism and flexibility, as it develops and
takes on different permutations in response to changing circumstances. The fluid nature of
customary law, and the fact that it is unwritten, poses a challenge in determining its content in
any particular case. In Kenya, customary law applies only in civil matters and hence is not
applicable in criminal cases.4
It should be noted that customary, religious and statutory laws operate within the same
social context and cover similar ground, particularly in the areas of personal law, which include
marriage, divorce, inheritance, custody and guardianship of children and land tenure. However,
there is a clear distinction between customary law and religious law. For example, while Islamic
law (Sharia) may govern similar areas as customary law, such as marriage, divorce and
inheritance, it is treated by the courts as a separate source of law and is dealt with by special
Kadhis’ courts.5
In Kenya, there is an intricate link between customary laws, customary practices and
women’s rights. Almost invariably, women occupy a disadvantaged position under customary
law. This is because traditional African societies are governed on the basis of patriarchal
structures where women’s individual interests were subsumed under the interests of the group.
Hence customary law contains aspects that often run counter to principles of gender equality and
non-discrimination espoused in both domestic and international human rights instruments. The
continued application of customary law in areas such as succession and marriage engenders
conflict with statutory provisions. For example, the right of women to inherit equally with men
3 These principles include: the centrality of the family, supremacy of the group over the individual, and the
importance of kinship ties. Some anthropologists have raised the question of whether the unwritten customs and
practices of pre-industrial small-scale societies can be regarded as law: see for instance A.S. Diamond, Primitive Law (London: Watts, 1935) and A.R. Radcliffe-Brown, Structure and Function in Primitive Society: Essays and
Addresses (Glencoe, Ill.: Free Press, 1952). Others, such as Malinowski and Gluckman were much more prepared toaccept that such customs and practice constitute law: See Max Gluckman, Ideas and Procedures in African
Customary Law (London: Oxford University Press, 1969); Branislaw Malinowski, Crime and Custom in Savage
Society (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1926). 4 See section 3 (2), Judicature Act (Cap. 2).5 Kadhis’ courts are classified as subordinate courts and are provided for under Article 170 of the Constitution of
2010. The Kadhis’ Courts Act (Cap. 11) sets out their jurisdiction. This jurisdiction of Kadhis’ courts is restricted
to the determination of questions of Muslim law relating to personal status, marriage, divorce or inheritance in proceedings in which all the parties profess the Muslim religion and submit to the jurisdiction of the courts.
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granted in the Law of Succession Act6 offends customary law practice that dictates against
women inheriting immovable property, particularly land. However, the flexibility and dynamism
inherent in custom, which is reflected in changing norms and practices, may also provide
windows of opportunities available to utilize customary law for the benefit of women.
After a long and arduous struggle for comprehensive constitutional reform, Kenya now
has a new Constitution which was promulgated on the 27th August, 2010.7 The Constitution of
Kenya 2010 contains important gains for gender equality and equity and generally for the
protection of human rights of all women and men in Kenya. A number of constitutional
provisions have a direct bearing on customary law in relation to women’s human rights, and in
significant ways these provisions address some pertinent issues relating to women’s position
under customary law. Further, unlike the former Constitution, the Constitution of 2010 provides
a platform for reconciling conflicts between customary law and statutory law.
2. Brief Background on Kenya
2.1. Social-cultural Background
Kenya is a multi-ethnic, multi-racial, multi-lingual and multi-religious society. There is a wide
diversity of indigenous peoples, making up 43 ethno-linguistic groups, who together comprise
the three major African linguistic groups: Bantu, Nilotic and Cushitic.8 Africans are the
overwhelming majority, comprising the 99% of the total population of 28.5 million.9 Besides the
African population, there is also a small but significant component of Arabs, Asians, and
Europeans, who together make up 1% of the total population. This diversity is reflected in the
different languages, history and cultural practices among the population. Among the African
people groups, the majority are patrilineal and patrilocal.10 Some common themes running
6 Cap. 160.7 The Proposed Constitution of Kenya was ratified in a referendum held on the 4th August, 2010 and was thereafter
promulgated as the Constitution of Kenya, 2010 on 27th August, 2010.8
Miraslova Prazak, “Kenyan Families”, in Yaw Oheneba-Sakyi and Baffour K. Takyi, eds., African Families at theTurn of the 21 st Century (Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 2006) 197 at 199.9 This is the figure given in the 1999 census: Government of Kenya, Central Bureau of Statistics, Ministry of
Finance and Planning, 1999 Population and Housing Census: Counting Our People for Development , Vols. 1 and 2(Nairobi: Government Printer, 2001). The most recent census was carried out in 2009 but the census report has not
yet been made public.10 In a patrilineal society, descent is traced through the paternal line (contrast matrilineal societies where descent is
traced through the maternal line). Patrilocality refers to a social system where a married couple resides with or nearthe husband’s parents (contrast matrilocality where residence is with the wife’s family).
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across African social and economic systems and patterns of family life include the centrality of
the family, supremacy of the group over the individual and importance of kinship ties.
3. The Application of Customary Law in Kenya as a Post-colonial State
3.1 Pre-colonial period
Kenya was subject to British colonial rule from 1895 until 1963 when she gained political
independence. The establishment of British colonial rule in Kenya was accompanied by the
superimposition of English law over the indigenous people, who already had their own systems
of governance. Under the indirect rule policy the British introduced a racially stratified dual
legal system, with one system of law for Africans and another system for non-Africans. Thus
Native Tribunals were established and run by ostensible traditional authorities, to apply “native
law and custom” (or customary law) to Africans while English-type courts run by British
magistrates and judges administered the received English law to govern non-Africans,11
Itshould be noted that customary law was applied mostly in the area of personal relations, notably
family law, land tenure and succession. The establishment of Native Tribunals meant that
customary law was to be interpreted and applied by state courts. Other aspects of law, such as
criminal law, contract and torts were governed by the received law consisting of English
common law and statute law.
3.2 Post-colonial period
At independence, the overriding goal of the Kenyan government was to promote national
unity in the face of ethnic, racial, religious and linguistic plurality. The multiplicity of
indigenous justice systems engendered by customary law was perceived as a hindrance to social
and economic development. A uniform legal system was therefore seen as desirable. The
government therefore embarked on measures to integrate the dual structure of the legal system.
In 1967 the native courts were dismantled and a unitary court system was established. 12
The government also made concerted efforts to harmonize the customary laws of the
various people groups with the received law. Two Commissions, one on Marriage and the other
on Succession, were appointed in 1967, with the mandate of drafting uniform laws of marriage
11 Yash Ghai & J.P.W. McAuslan, Public Law and Political Change in Kenya (Nairobi, Oxford University Press,
1970).12 These changes were effected through a number of statutes, namely the Judicature Act (Cap. 8), the Magistrate’sCourts Act (Cap. 10) and the Kadhis’ Courts Act (Cap. 11).
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(and divorce) and succession respectively. The Marriage Commission in its 1968 Report annexed
a Marriage Bill which was intended to constitute a unified system of marriage law. However,
despite various attempts to enact it, the Marriage Bill has never been passed.13 The Report of the
Commission on the Law of Succession experienced greater success as it culminated in the
passing of the Law of Succession Act, which came into operation in 1981. Although the Act was
intended to be the uniform law for all Kenyans irrespective of race or religion, this was not to be
as exemptions were thereafter granted to certain categories of people, such as Muslims and some
pastoralist communities. Other reforms included the introduction of individualized land tenure
under the Registered Land Act.14 The result was to extinguish customary rights and interests in
land that had been adjudicated and given individual tenure.
Hence, despite the attempt to harmonize the legal system the pluralistic base of the legal
system remained. At present, the state legal system recognizes the applicability of customary
and religious laws to varying degrees, particularly in the areas of personal law, such as marriage,
divorce, inheritance and land tenure. Indigenous norms still govern the lives of the people,
particularly in rural areas where the majority reside. Further, a variety of informal justice forums
persist despite the presence of the state judicial system, albeit not in their “pure” traditional form.
Examples include village elders, chiefs and other community justice structures. These structures,
which apply popular localized norms, often constitute the only accessible and relevant justice
system for the majority, particularly in rural areas where the majority of women in Kenya live.
3.3 Impact of Colonization on Customary Law
The emphasis in traditional African society was on family and larger kin groups characterized by
strong extended family ties and community bonds. While it is apparent that children and women
occupied an inferior position in traditional society, especially with regard to property, there were
also protective mechanisms to ensure that their interests were taken care of. For instance, after a
father’s or husband’s death the deceased’s property would be entrusted to one of the male
relatives of the deceased who was obliged to look after the welfare of the deceased’s wife and
13 The Marriage Bill was presented before the Kenyan Parliament in 1968, 1979 and 1985 but was never passed. In
2007 a fresh Marriage Bill was drafted and is awaiting presentation to Parliament.14 Cap. 300.
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children. Similarly, women’s rights of occupation and cultivation of the family land were
ensured.
Colonialism and capitalism had far-reaching effects on customary norms and practice. In
general, the interaction between colonial state law and customary law worsened the position of
women. Colonialism and capitalism brought in their wake a general breakdown in community
institutions and the dismantling of safeguards for protection of weaker people in society,
particularly women. For instance the institution of the levirate, which was originally intended
for the protection of the widow and her children, has been abused and has resulted in wives and
their children being dispossessed by male relatives on the death of a husband. Similarly, the
institution of bridewealth (also known as dowry) has been commercialized and women may be
regarded as property which is seen as justifying practices like wife-beating. The individualization
of land title and commoditization of land also jeopardized women’s interests. For example in
Kenya, the processes of land adjudication and consolidation almost invariably led to vesting of
legal title to land in men as the heads of households. Under the Registered Land Act legal title
to land confers absolute proprietorship with unfettered rights of possession, use and disposal to
the exclusion of all other interest, including interest under customary law.15 Hence, women are
disadvantaged as their rights of use and occupation under customary law are thereby jeopardized.
4. Nature of Customary Law in Kenya
4.1 Customary law: static or evolutionary?
Customary law is characterized by dynamism and flexibility, as it develops and takes on
different permutations in response to changing social conditions. Some scholars are of the view
that custom and customary law is actually an “invention” of colonial governments in
collaboration with local leaders.16 Customary law is unwritten and is passed on through the
practices and oral traditions of the community concerned. In Kenya, there was an attempt at
codifying customary law soon after independence in order to make it easier for judges to
ascertain its content. The attempt at codification did not fully materialize but instead took the
15 Section 30, Registered Land Act (Cap. 300).16 See Martin Chanock, Law , Custom and Social Order: The Colonial Experience in Malawi and Zambia
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985); Terence Ranger, “The Invention of Traditionalism in Colonial
Africa”, in Eric Hobsbawm & Terence Ranger, eds, The Invention of Tradition (Cambridge: Cambridge UniversityPress, 1983).
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form of Restatements of the customary laws of marriage, divorce and succession which were
published in 1968.17
Although the Restatements were not intended to be a code of customary law, they have
acquired the status of a quasi-code, which judges have tended to treat as authoritative and
binding.18 Most judges who apply customary law rely on accounts of customary law that record
such law as if it were static and do not take into consideration changes which have taken place in
Kenyan society since the Restatements were written in 1968. It has been argued that the courts’
continued reliance upon customary law codes or quasi-codes, buttressed by the doctrine of
precedent, has resulted in the ossification of customary law, thus stifling opportunities for
development of customary law.19 Thus there are divergences between “judges’ law” consisting
of judges’ pronouncements and “living law” consisting of people’s practices on the ground.
In Kenya it is often difficult to distinguish between customary law and customary
practices. This is due to the ever-evolving nature of customary practices, which makes it
difficult to ascertain the content of customary law at any given time. As already mentioned,
customary law is treated as a question of fact which must be proved in evidence. Questions
therefore arise as to whether a particular customary practice has achieved the status of customary
law. The courts mostly rely on the evidence of witnesses who are usually elderly males. These
witnesses may have warped or biased views, particularly in relation to gender relations. This has
important implications for women’s rights as women’s perspectives of customary law are not
taken into account in judicial considerations of what constitutes customary law in a given case.
However, there is some indication of changes in customary norms and practices over time
to accommodate new realities. Factors influencing these changes include education, women’s
economic empowerment, civic education, awareness of rights among others. In Karanja v.
Karanja20 the court recognized that as a result of women being educated and earning salaries, it
is quite possible for both married and unmarried women to acquire their own land. Local
17 These were two volumes which were produced by Eugene Cotran and published under the general editorship of
Anthony Allott, namely: Eugene Cotran, The Law of Marriage and Divorce: Restatement of African Law, Kenya,
vol. 1: (London: Sweet & Maxwell, 1968) and Eugene Cotran, The Law of Succession: Restatement of African Law, Kenya, vol. 2: (London: Sweet & Maxwell, 1969) [ Restatements].18
The Restatements have been relied upon in a large number of cases, e.g. Mwathi v. Mwathi [1995-1998] E.A. 229; Re Estate of Naomi Wanjiku Mwangi (deceased) (Nairobi High Court Succession Cause No. 1781 of 2001) and
many others. However, in Atemo v. Imujaro [2003] K.L.R. 435 the Court of Appeal cautioned against treatment of
the Restatements as binding on every issue of customary law in Kenya.19 Anne Hellum, Women’s Human Rights and Legal Pluralism in Africa: Mixed Norms and Identities in Infertility
Management in Zimbabwe (Avondale, Harare: Mond Books, 1999); Julie Stewart, “Why I Can’t Teach Customary
Law”, in John Eekelaar & Thadabantu Nhlapo, eds., The Changing Family: Family Forms and Family Law (Oxford:
Hart Publishing, 1998) 217;20 [1975] KLR 307.
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women’s groups and NGOs have been instrumental in facilitating these processes. For example,
through chamas (women’s rotating savings groups) women have been able to raise capital to buy
property, own businesses on their own. Hence the customary perception that women cannot own
or manage property is being put to question. There is also some evidence that inheritance
practices are gradually (though very slowly) changing to accommodate the rights of daughters to
inherit their fathers’ estates in some instances particularly in situations where a daughter have
been taking care of her father in his old age21. Some customary concepts, such as those relating
to trusts, have in some cases operated to enable women to hold land on behalf of the family and
to make decisions relating to apportionment and use of such land.22
Some cultural practices are also undergoing change. There is some indication that there
is less than full observance of certain burial rites and practices, such as tero buru and widow
inheritance practiced by some communities. This is attributable in large part to the influence of
public health campaigns by government and NGOSs, particularly with the spectre of
HIV/AIDS.23
In some other regions, alternative rites of passage for women have been initiated
minus the “cut” usually associated with female circumcision.
4.2 Choice of law dilemmas
The existence of multiple legal systems, where customary and statutory/common laws are
recognized at the same time, gives rise to choice of law dilemmas. For example, the law of
marriage in Kenya is governed by four systems of law, hence parties a have choice of what
system of marriage to use. However, the legal consequences of marriage and the rights and
obligations of parties under the different systems are not uniform. For instance, a woman is
entitled to maintenance from her husband under the statutory system of marriage but not
generally under the customary law system. However, these legal systems do not operate in
separate compartments, but interact with one another in various ways. People often traverse the
boundaries between the legal systems, and in many cases, these boundaries are blurred. For
instance, it is common for a couple to go through a customary marriage ceremony and
21
Celestine Itumbi Nyamu, Gender, Culture and Property Relations in a Pluralistic Social Setting (J.S.D.Dissertation, Harvard University, 2000) [Property Relations] [unpublished]. 22 Fiona McKenzie, “Gender and Land Rights in Murang’a District, Kenya” (1990) 17 Journal of Peasant Studies
609.22 Nyamu, Property Relations, supra note 21.22 McKenzie, supra note 22.23 M.D. Okech-Owiti, “Some Socio-Legal Issues”, in J.B. Ojwang & J.N.K. Mugambi, eds. The S.M. Otieno Case:
Death and Burial in Modern Kenya (Nairobi: Nairobi University Press, 1989) 11.
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subsequently enter into a statutory marriage. It is then not clear what system of law should
govern that couple’s relationship, and hence, what rights and obligations obtain in that
relationship.
More positively, multiple legal systems offer the opportunity of forum shopping, where
parties have the advantage of choosing the legal system which offers more benefits for them.
For example, a woman married under both customary law and statutory law may choose to file a
suit in the formal state courts, rather than in informal traditional forums, as the former may
afford her more rights such as maintenance and a share in matrimonial property. However, the
woman’s choice may be constrained by lack of access the formal courts due to the high costs,
geographical distance, complexity of procedure and other such factors. Such a woman may also
be discouraged from filing suit in court by pressure from other family members and the threat of
social disapprobation.
5. Recognition of Customary Law by the State and Incorporation into State’s Legal System
5.1. Customary Law as a Source of Law in Kenya
The sources of law in Kenya are set out in Section 3 of the Judicature Act.24 Subsection (1) lists
these sources, in descending order of importance, as: the Constitution, all other written laws
(including certain Acts of the U.K. Parliament), the substance of English common law, doctrines
of equity and statutes of general application.25 However, sub-section (1) contains a proviso
which states that common law, equity and statutes of general application shall apply only in so
far as the circumstances of Kenya and its inhabitants permit and subject to such qualifications as
those circumstances may render necessary. Section 3 sub-section (2) states as follows:
“The courts shall be guided by African customary law in civil cases in which one
or more of the parties is subject to it or affected by it, so far as it is applicable andis not repugnant to justice and morality or inconsistent with any written law.”
Thus it is clear from the Judicature Act that customary law is a source of law in Kenya.
However, the application of customary law under section 3 (2) is limited in a number of ways.
Firstly, the application of customary law is restricted to civil cases only, where at least one of the
parties is subject to customary law.26 Hence customary law is not applicable to criminal cases. It
should be noted that under Section 77 (8) of the former Constitution, a person could not be
24 Cap. 8.25These latter English sources apply as they subsisted as at 12th August 1897.26 This would mean a Kenyan of African origin or anyone else who has subjected themselves to customary law.
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convicted of a criminal offence unless that offence was defined, and the penalty for it prescribed,
in a written law.27 As customary law is unwritten law, this means that criminal offences found in
customary law cannot apply in the Kenyan legal system. Customary criminal offences are
therefore not part of Kenyan law.28 The new Constitution of 2010 does not have specific
provisions similar to those of section 77 (8) of the former Constitution but, in my view, the
principle has not changed.
Secondly, customary law should not be inconsistent with written law. This suggests that
where there is a conflict between customary law and a written law, such as a statute or
constitutional provisions, then the latter should take precedence. However, this provision has
been fraught with problems of interpretation which arose mainly from the proviso to section 82
(4) of the former Constitution. While section 82 (1) provided that no law should make
discriminatory provisions either of itself or in its effect (sex being a prohibited ground of
discrimination), the impact of that provision was watered down by subsection (4) (b) and (c) of
section 82 which provided that the non-discrimination provisions of section 82 (1) would not
apply to any law so far as that law made provision:
(b) with respect to adoption, marriage, divorce, burial, devolution of property ondeath or other matters of personal law.
(c) for the application in the case of members of a particular race or tribe of
customary law with respect to any matter to the exclusion of any law withrespect to that matter which is applicable in the case of other persons.
Thus the “claw-back” provision29 of sub-sections (4) (b) and (c) expressly excluded the non-
discrimination provisions of the Constitution in matters of personal law, and also allowed forcustomary law to be applied even where it was discriminatory. This provided ground for judges
to rule in favour of customary law over common or statutory law notwithstanding the provisions of
the Judicature Act. Hence, in the S.M. Otieno case, customary law relating to burial was held to
have precedence over common or statutory law. Similarly, in succession matters, although the
Law of Succession Act30 clearly stipulates that the Act is to be of universal application to all
27 The only exception to this rule was that a court may punish a person for contempt of law even where the act or
omission constituting the contempt was not defined in a written law and the penalty for it was not so prescribed.28 Under the auspices of the Restatement of Customary Law Project, the government embarked on the restatement
and unification of customary criminal offences with a view to their incorporation into the criminal law of Kenya: see
Eugene Cotran, Report on Customary Criminal Offences in Kenya (Nairobi: Government Printer, 1963) [Criminal
Offences]. Pursuant to that undertaking, some customary criminal offences were incorporated into the Penal Code
(Cap. 63).29This sub-section is referred to as a “clawback” clause as it takes away with one hand what it has given with
another (i.e. gender equality).30 Cap. 160.
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succession matter, judges have in many cases interpreted the Act in such as way as to leave room
for the application of customary law, often giving priority to customary law over statutory law,
for instance in excluding the rights of daughters to inherit their fathers’ estates.
The ambivalence in the Constitution is compounded by the uncertainty in the language of
section 3 (2) of the Judicature Act. First, it is not clear whether customary law falls, in order of
hierarchy, at the bottom of the ladder as a source of Kenyan law, or whether it should be treated
as cross-cutting and outside the hierarchical order. Second, it is also not clear what the term
“guided” really means. Does it mean that courts are not bound to apply customary law, or does it
mean that courts must always have regard to customary law when making decisions?31 The
precise meaning of the term “guided” was the subject of much argument in the S.M. Otieno case,
but regrettably the decision in that case did not make a definitive finding on that question, thus
the uncertainty remains.
Happily, the new Constitution of 2010 now deals quite decisively with this issue. Article
2 (4) clearly provides that any law, including customary law, that is inconsistent with the
Constitution is void to the extent of the inconsistency. This section clearly subordinates
customary law to the Constitution and removes the ambivalence in the former Constitution with
regard to customary and religious laws in the realm of personal law. Thus customary law cannot
now be used to trump the provisions of the Bill of Rights in the new Constitution.
Thirdly, the Judicature Act subjects the application of customary law to the “repugnancy
test”, that is, customary law must not be repugnant to justice and morality. 32 This means that a
rule of customary law may not be applied where the court is of the opinion that it offends justice
or morality. However, it should be noted that the application of this test is dependent on judicial
discretion as to what constitutes justice and morality. In Wambugi w/o Gatimu v. Stephen Nyaga
Kimani33 it was held that customary law is applicable under section 3 (2) of the Judicature Act as
long as the court is satisfied that the custom, if proved, is not repugnant to justice or morality.
On the facts of the case, a custom that operated to bar women from inheritance (and hence
discriminated against women) was found not to be repugnant to ordinary notions of justice.
However, some judges have expressed disquiet about declaring customary law as repugnant to
31 The issue of the status of customary law was at the heart of the famous S.M. Otieno case. 32 The repugnancy clause was commonly used in former British colonies. The question has sometimes been raised
as to whose standards of justice or morality are to be applied.33 [1992] KAR 292 (Court of Appeal).
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justice and morality. In Kamete Ene Ateti Marine v. Mosupai ole Ateti34 the court was of the
view that customs and traditions are time tested and based on wisdom and experience, hence they
should not be brushed aside lightly, however tempting it might be to do so, unless there are
sound reasons for it, which have to be judicially determined.
5.2 Proof of Customary Law in Kenyan Courts
Since colonial times to the present, customary law has always, by virtue of its being unwritten,
been treated as a question of fact which must be proven in court as a matter of evidence. Thus,
despite being a source of law, customary law is treated differently from legislation, common law
and equity which do not have to be proved in this way.35 This principle was laid down by the
Privy Council in the Ghanaian case of Angu v. Attah36 where it was stated as follows:
“As is the case with all customary law, it has to be proved in the first instance by
calling witnesses acquainted with the native customs until the particular customs
have by frequent proof in the courts become so notorious that the courts will take
judicial notice of them.”
The justification for this was the difficulty that colonial courts found in finding out and
applying customary law to cases coming before them. The difficulty arose partly from the
multiplicity of the different customary laws, partly from uncertainty regarding the limits of
operation of customary law in competition or conflict with statutory or religious law, and partly
from the fluid nature of customary law itself.37
Under section 51 (1) of the Evidence Act,38 persons who are likely to know of its
existence can adduce evidence concerning opinions relating to custom or right. In Ernest
Kinyanjui Kimani v. Muiru Gikanga & Another 39 it was held that where customary law is neither
notorious nor documented it must be established for the court’s guidance by the party intending
to rely on it. The necessity to prove customary law as a matter of fact has onerous implications
for women litigants. This is because even though under the rules of procedure a woman has the
same capacity as a man to call evidence and rebut it, in practice the people recognized by society
as custodians of custom tend to be men (usually elderly). Women are generally not viewed as
34 Nbi. High Court Civil Appeal No. 224 of 1995, cited in William Musyoka, Law of Succession (Nairobi,
LawAfrica, 2006) at 17.35 Musyoka, ibid. at 286.36 [1916] Gold Coast Privy Council Judgments (PC) 1874-1928.37 A.N. Allott, “The Judicial Ascertainment of Customary Law in British Africa” (1957) 20 Modern Law Review
244.38 Cap. 80.39 [1965] E.A. 735.
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knowledgeable in customary law and have to call on male witnesses. Yet many women may not
have the financial or social resources to do so. The inability of women to give their perspectives
of what constitutes customary law often results in a distortion of the content of customary law, so
that courts apply rigid or narrow conceptions of customary law without considering changes that
have taken place on the ground or in disregard of the socio-economic context in which a
particular customary practices is observed.40 For example, the enforcement of the customary
norm that women are not entitled to maintenance on divorce fails to recognize that the social
structures that previously existed to support women upon divorce no longer exist in modern
times.
Under section 87 (1) of the Civil Procedure Act,41 a court may summon the assistance of
competent assessors in any cause or matter pending before it in which questions may arise as to
the laws or customs of any tribe, caste or community and such assessors shall attend and assist
accordingly. Assessors differ from witness in that they are independent persons appointed by the
court. These assessors are members of the local community who are deemed to be
knowledgeable about relevant customary law. However, as already observed, knowledge or
expertise in customary law is seen as vested primarily in men rather than women, hence such
assessors will usually be men. This has detrimental effects on women’s claims as the account of
custom that the court receives comes from a predominantly male perspective.
The court may take judicial notice that a given customary practice has gained notoriety. Under
section 60 of the Evidence Act,42 the courts shall take judicial notice of both written and
unwritten law, and where the court is called upon to take judicial notice of any fact, it may rely
on books and documents produced before it.43 It is in this context that the Restatements of
African Law take on particular significance. The courts in Kenya have in numerous cases treated
these volumes as authoritative statements of customary law. For example, in Mwathi v.
Mwathi44 the Court of Appeal regarded statements contained in the Restatements on Kikuyu
customs concerning the distribution of the estate of an intestate as binding or conclusive.45
Similary, in Gituamba v. Gituamba,46 the same court treated Jomo Kenyatta’s Facing Mount
40 Hellum, supra note 19; Stewart, supra note 19.41 Cap. 21.42 Cap. 80.43 See also section 41, Cap. 80 and Rule 64, Probate and Administrative Rules .44 [1995-98] E.A. 229.45 See other cases cited in Musyoka, supra note 34 at 288.46 [1983] K.L.R. 575.
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Kenya,47 an anthropological account of the tribal life of the Kikuyu, as conclusive on questions
of land inheritance among the Kikuyu. As earlier mentioned, the codification or quasi-
codification of customary law has been criticized as having contributed to the ossification of
customary law. It is heartening to note that in at least one case, Atemo v. Imujaro,48 the Court of
Appeal sounded a cautionary note against treating the Restatements as binding on every issue of
customary law and, in recognition of the dynamic nature of customary law, observed that the law
in those volumes may not be the same today.
5.3 Courts’ jurisdiction in customary law
Unlike some other African countries,49 Kenya has no special customary courts. However, the
various courts in Kenya have varying levels of jurisdiction in customary law. Under the
Constitution, the High Court has original unlimited jurisdiction in all civil and criminal matters.
Though not specifically stated, this jurisdiction includes customary law jurisdiction. This means
that it may hear any civil matter based on customary law. The Court of Appeal hears appeals
from the High Court on all matters, including customary law matters. As the High Court and
Court of Appeal are not expected to be experts in customary law, they usually rely on the
evidence of witnesses and also on independent assessors to enlighten them on the content of
customary law. They also pay high regard to the Restatements relating to customary law of
marriage, divorce and succession.
Magistrate’s courts, comprising resident and district magistrate’s courts, are subordinate
to the High Court and Court of Appeal. Magistrate’s courts have jurisdiction to hear customary
law cases50, but this jurisdiction is restricted to customary law claims related only to certain
matters. Under section 2 of the Magistrate’s Courts Act, a “claim under customary law” is
defined to mean a claim concerning any of the following matters under African customary law:
1) Land held under customary tenure
2) Marriage, divorce, maintenance or dowry3) Seduction or pregnancy of an unmarried woman or girl
4) Enticement of or adultery with a married woman
5) Matters affecting status, and in particular the status of women, widows andchildren, including guardianship, custody, adoption and legitimacy; and
6)
Intestate succession and administration of intestate estates, so far as not governed by any written law.
47 Jomo Kenyatta, Facing Mount Kenya: The Traditional Life of the Gikuyu (Nairobi: Kenway Publications, 1938). 48 [2003] K.L.R. 435.49 For example Botswana, Ghana, Zimbabwe.50 Section 9 (a), Magistrate’s Courts Act (Cap. 10).
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In 1991, special Land Disputes Tribunals were created under the Land Dispute Tribunals
Act51 in order to deal with land disputes occurring in agricultural land within rural areas. These
tribunals are constituted by panels of elders who are expected to apply customary law in the
resolution of land disputes within their jurisdiction. “Elders” are defined as persons in the
community to which the parties belong and who are recognized by custom in such community as
being, by virtue of age, experience or otherwise, competent to resolve issues between the parties.
In reality, the majority of these elders are older men. The tribunals have jurisdiction to deal with
civil disputes relating to the following three areas: the division or determination of boundaries to
land, including land held in common; claims to occupy or work land, and trespass to land.
However, the administration of these tribunals has been fraught with difficulties such as
corruption, bias and exceeding of jurisdiction.
6. Analysis of Key Domestic Case Law that Recognizes Customary Law
There are numerous cases in Kenya that show recognition of customary law, either generally or
in relation to specific issues. Recognition of customary law may be positive or negative for
women, depending on the effects of such recognition. The following is a selection of cases
where customary law has been recognized.
6.1 General Recognition of Customary Law
At the heart of one of the most famous Kenyan cases, the S.M. Otieno case,52 was the question of
the place of customary law in Kenya. S.M. Otieno, a prominent trial lawyer of the Luo
community, died intestate in 1986. The respondents, members of the deceased’s Umira Kager
clan, sued his widow, Wambui Otieno, seeking to have the deceased buried in his ancestral home
in rural western Kenya in accordance with Luo customary law. On the other hand, the widow,
who was of the Kikuyu community, wished to bury him in their suburban home in Nairobi in
51 Cap. 18.52 Otieno v. Ougo & Siranga [1987] eKLR. The case generated massive publicity and verbatim accounts were
published in Kenyan newspapers daily. The Daily Nation, Kenya’s leading newspaper, published a collection of
print media articles and court proceedings of the case (Sean Egan, ed., S.M. Otieno Case: Kenya’s Unique Burial
Saga (Nairobi: Nation Newspapers Publications, 1988). The international press also took a keen interest in the saga;
see for instance “African Tradition and Modern Values: Tribal Loyalties are Often at Odds with Nationalism”, International Herald Tribune, February 13, 1987; “Kenyan Judge Awards Corpse of Modern Lawyer to Tribe”, The
Washington Post , February 14, 1987. Scholars from the University of Nairobi published a collection of essays on
the case: see J.B. Ojwang & J.N.K. Mugambi, The S.M. Otieno Case: Death and Burial in Modern Kenya (Nairobi:
Nairobi University Press, 1989). See also Winifred Kamau, “S.M. Otieno Revisited: A View Through LegalPluralist Lenses” (2009) 5 Law Society of Kenya Journal 59 and other works cited in this paper.
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accordance with common law. Wambui’s lawyers argued that Otieno had, through Christian urbanized
life-style, and statutory marriage to a non-Luo woman, forsaken tribal custom for a modern life and that
customary Luo burial law therefore did not apply in his case, but that rather, the applicable law was
common law. Otieno's clan asserted that, on the contrary, Otieno's birth and upbringing as a Luo was
paramount and that therefore customary law applied in the case. Unfortunately, it was not clear which of
the two legal systems takes precedence in such a situation.
After drawn-out proceedings, the Court of Appeal finally declared that customary lawwas the applicable law in the case and consequently ordered that the deceased be buried in his
ancestral home according to the customary practices of his clan. The court stated that customary
law is the personal law of Kenyan Africans and there is no way an African citizen of Kenya can
divest himself of the association with the tribe of his father if those customs are patrilineal,
irrespective of the person’s choice of lifestyle. Personal law means the law that relates to a
person’s status or identity and includes the law of marriage, divorce, succession, custody, and
burial among others.
The case exemplifies the conflict apparent between customary law on the one hand,
and statutory and common law on the other hand. However, the court adopted versions of
custom advanced by patriarchal community elders which were biased against women. The
ruling in this case had negative implications for gender relations as a woman’s right to bury her
husband under common law was trumped by customary law. It should be noted that burial is one
of the areas of personal where discrimination was allowed by the former Constitution, and the
court in this case sanctioned such discrimination. Further repercussions are that the case can also
be used as a precedent under the stare decisis rule to justify use of customary law to deny
women’s rights under common law or statutory law.53
6.2 Recognition of customary law in specific areas:
6.2.1 Succession: Although the Law of Succession Act is intended to be the universal law
applicable in matters of succession, customary law is to some extent also applicable. As later
discussed, some geographical regions of the country have been exempted from the application ofthe Act and in these regions, customary law is the applicable law relating to succession to
agricultural land and livestock. Discretion has also been left to individuals to indicate in their
wills any religious or customary law that they would wish to govern the administration of their
53 See Patricia Stamp, “Burying Otieno: The Politics of Gender and Ethnicity in Kenya” (1991) 16 Signs 808.
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estates. Customary law is also applicable to estates of people who died before the
commencement of the Act in April 1981.
Outside the above situations, there remains controversy as to whether and to what
extent customary law is also applicable in succession matters. While some courts have insisted
on the exclusive applicability of the Law of Succession Act, other courts have maintained that
customary law generally applicable in succession matters, even where there is no express
provision for it in the Act. Under this approach, customary law has been applied to deny women
the right to inherit their father’s or husband’s estate, as happened in Mary Gichuru v. Esther
Gachuhi,54 and in Karanja v. Githara. 55 In this regard, courts place much reliance on the
assertions in Cotran’s Restatements on the content of customary law.
Other courts have taken the view that customary law is applicable provided it is not
repugnant to justice and morality vide section 3 (2) of the Judicature Act. This was the stance
taken in Wambugi w/o Gatimu v. Stephen Nyaga Kimani56 On the facts of the case, a
discriminatory custom that operated to bar women from inheriting her father’s land was found
not to be repugnant to ordinary notions of justice. Indeed, the custom was held to be a salutary
one as it ensured that the land remained in the family.57
By contrast, there is a growing body of jurisprudence which espouses the view that
customary law should not apply where it offends the principles enshrined in international human
rights instruments. , such as the and the Additional Protocol to the African Charter on Human
and Peoples Rights. For instance, in Mbinga v. Mbinga (2006), Lady Justice Khaminwa appealed
to the principles of non-discrimination enshrined in international treaties to which Kenya is a signatory,
namely the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) and Convention on the Elimination
of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW)CEDAW, to override a customary law
that allowed discrimination against married daughters in inheritance matters. In a bold articulation of
gender equality, the judge noted that the custom of disinheriting daughters (female children) went against
the current jurisprudence in international law which was making a concerted effort to ensure that there
was no discrimination on the ground of gender. Kenya was a signatory to general international treaties
54 Civil Appeal No. 76 of 199855 Civil Case No. 2039 of 199856 [1992] KAR 292 (Court of Appeal).57 See generally Musyoka, supra note 34.
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which clearly demanded that all customs and laws which discriminated against a person on the ground of
gender must be discarded to ensure that the equality of female persons with that of males was guaranteed.
Accordingly the judge declared the discriminatory custom repugnant as mandated by the Judicature Act.
Similarly, Lady Justice Wendoh in Re Estate of Musyoka (deceased) (2005) noted that Kamba
customary law, which was relied on by one of the parties in a bid to exclude a woman from inheritance, is
discriminatory on the ground of sex and contrary to the Law of Succession Act. The judge then
proceeded to apply to apply the UDHR, CEDAW, and the Additional Protocol to the African Charter on
Human and Peoples’ rights notwithstanding the fact that these instruments had not expressly become part
of the domestic law of Kenya. She stated that international law is applicable in Kenya as part of our law
so long as it is not in conflict with the existing law even without specific legislation adopting them. It
should be noted that most of the judges who subscribe to this approach have received gender training
under the Jurisprudence of Equality Program (JEP) which was spearheaded by the Kenya Women Judges
Association in the early 2000s. Such an approach is laudable and will serve to provide useful precedents
for the future. It is further bolstered by the Constitution of 2010 which in Article 2 (5) and (6) expressly
provides that the general rules of international law as well as all treaties or conventions ratified by Kenya
shall form part of the law of Kenya.
6.2.2 Marriage
By virtue of section 3 (2) of the Judicature Act, customary law is recognized as a system of
marriage in Kenya, which is as valid as any of the other systems of marriage. Where a marriage
is contracted under customary law, it is customary law that is expected to regulate all aspects of
the marriage, such as capacity to marry, age of marriage, requisites of marriage, rights and duties
in marriage, etc.
In Hortensiah Wanjiku Yawe v. Public Trustee58 it was held that the common law
presumption of marriage (i.e. marriage by long cohabitation and repute) could apply irrespective
of the form of marriage. Hence the presumption could apply even in a customary marriage
58 Civil Appeal No. 13 of 1976 (unreported].
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which is potentially polygamous. The presumption was in this case applied where the parties
had failed to establish evidence proving that they had been married under customary law. The
effect of the decision was that the woman applicant was able to claim part of the deceased’s
estate in her capacity as the deceased’s wife under customary law. The decision in this case was
followed in a number of subsequent cases, such as Esther Wanjiku Njau v. Mary Wahito,59 and is
now firmly established as a principle.
6.2.3 Matrimonial Property
In Karanja v. Karanja60 it was held that the English Married Women’s Property Act, 1882
(MWPA) was applicable to customary marriages. This ruling was advantageous to women as it
meant that women married under customary law could apply to court for apportionment and
distribution of matrimonial property. This was contrary to the argument by the respondent
husband in that case that customary law did not give rise to the imputation of a trust in favour of
the wife in respect of property jointly acquired property between the husband and wife.
6.2.4 Land tenure
The Registered Land Act61 was passed in 1963 to govern land that had been converted to
individual land tenure from communal tenure. Registration under this Act confers absolute
proprietorship of the land which extinguishes all non-registrable interests, including interests
under customary law such as rights of occupation, cultivation and use.62 This is disadvantageous
to certain categories of people, such as women, children and younger males as title to land is not
normally registered in their names. However, in Gathiba v. Gathiba63 and other subsequent
cases the concept of customary trust was recognized as a matter of judicial notice. Under this
concept, a customary trust is imputed in order to protect customary interests of occupation,
cultivation and use, notwithstanding the express provisions of the Registered Land Act. This
recognition of customary law interests operates to the advantage of women and other categories
of people who would otherwise be disenfranchised from the land.
59 [2006] eKLR.60 [1975] K.L.R. 307.61 Cap. 300.62 See for instance Esiroyo v. Esiroyo [1973] E.A. 388; 63 [1991] K.L.R. (Env. & Land).
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7. Challenges of protecting the equality rights of women in relation to customary law in
Kenya.
There are a number of areas where customary law poses a challenge to the protection of equality
rights of women. These relate mostly to personal law areas of marriage, divorce and inheritance
(succession) as well as in property relations.
7.1 Conflict of Marriage Law Systems
Due to the pluralistic nature of Kenya’s personal law regime, marriage and divorce are regulated
under four different legal systems, namely customary,64 statutory,65 Islamic66 and Hindu.67 In
addition, Kenyan law also recognizes cohabitation relationships through the judicial application
of the common law presumption of marriage.68
The problem of multiplicity of legal regimes comes not from the mere fact of multiplicity
but because of the differential rights and duties arising under each legal regime. Each system has
its own rules about various aspects of marriage such as age of consent, whether the marriage is
monogamous or polygamous, and the rights and obligations of the parties. This means that a
person’s rights and obligations with respect to marriage and divorce can only be ascertained with
reference to the system under which the marriage was established, thereby making it almost
impossible to apply a uniform standard. In general, women in customary marriages are
disadvantaged in the event of breakdown of marriage or death of spouse. It should also be noted
that one aspect of personal law may impact on another aspect; for instance marriage, succession
and property relations are inextricably linked.
64 Customary marriage is governed by the customary laws of the various ethnic communities in Kenya. Thoughcustomary norms of marriage are not uniform among all Kenyan communities, there are some basic similarities. For
instance, all customary marriages involve the union of not only the individual parties but of their families. Such
marriages are potentially polygamous and usually require payment of bridewealth.65 Statutory marriages are governed by the Marriage Act which is the principal enactment dealing with marriage.
Marriages under this Act are open to all persons irrespective of race or religion. The African Christian Marriage andDivorce Act (Cap. 151) provides a simple procedure for the celebration of marriage by Christian Africans and for
the conversion of a customary marriage into a statutory monogamous marriage. Marriages under the statutory
system are intended to be strictly monogamous and do not allow for bigamy or polygamy, both of which are prohibited and invalidated (see ss. 35 (1) and 37 of the Marriage and s. 5 of the African Christian Marriage and
Divorce Act. The Matrimonial Causes Act65 contains the law of divorce and matrimonial causes relating to persons
married under the two above-mentioned Acts.66 Islamic marriages are celebrated under the Mohammedan Marriage, Divorce and Succession Act (Cap. 156)
which applies the Islamic (sharia) law of marriage, divorce and succession to people of the Islamic faith. Islamicmarriages are potentially polygamous up to a maximum of four wives at a time. 67 Marriages between people of the Hindu religion are governed by the Hindu Marriage and Divorce Act (Cap. 157).
Such marriages are monogamous. Divorce and related matters are subject to the Matrimonial Causes Act.68 This is by virtue of section 3 (1) of the Judicature Act (Cap. 8) which provides for the application of the commonlaw of England in force as at 12 August 1897.
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The multiplicity is compounded by the complex intersection between the systems, owing
largely to the fact that people do not generally keep within one system of marriage but constantly
traverse the boundaries. For instance, most Kenyan Africans who marry in church (under
statute) at the same time go through some customary rites, such as negotiations for exchange of
bridewealth. Hence the same parties contract a customary marriage and then follow it by a
statutory marriage or vice versa. The question may then arise of which system of law governs
the relationship, i.e. whether statutory law or customary law. This results in lack of clarity as to
which system of marriage governs their relationship, and hence what rights and obligations
obtain in the relationship.69 Conflict also arises where a man marries a woman under customary
law and then subsequently enters into a marriage with another woman under statute. Conversely,
a man may marry a woman under statute and then go on to marry another woman (or women)
under customary law. Both the Marriage Act70 and the African Christian Marriage and Divorce
cover these two situations and invalidate and criminalize such subsequent unions.71 However,
the penal sanctions are breached with impunity and are hardly ever prosecuted.
Section 45 (4) of the new Constitution of 2010 retains the recognition of multiple
marriage and family law systems but only to the extent that such marriages or systems of law are
consistent with the Constitution. This would include the Bill of Rights and all the equality and
non-discrimination provisions. Section 45 (3) provides that parties to a marriage are entitled to
equal rights at the time of, during and at the dissolution of the marriage. Although the new
Constitution does not explicitly address the question of how to resolve conflicts between
different marriage systems, it at least points to itself as the standard. Any conflict would thus
have to be resolved in light to constitutional principles, including equality and non-
discrimination.
7.2 Age of Marriage
Early marriage is sanctioned by customary law which does not prescribe a minimum age of
marriage of girls, provided they have reached puberty. It is common for girls, some as young as
12 years of age, to be married off, usually to much older men. This practice has a negative
impact on young girls, as it adversely affects their health, education and general socio-economic
69 E.g. in Ayoob v. Ayoob (Nbi Civil Appeal No. 34 of 1967 (unreported); Mwangi & Others v. West [1976] K.L.R.
203.70 Cap. 150.71 See sections 35 and 37, Marriage Act (Cap. 150). See also section 5, African Christian Marriage and Divorce Act(Cap. 151).
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position. Early marriage offends statutory provisions relating to age of marriage and capacity to
marry. For instance, the Marriage Act and the African Christian Marriage and Divorce Act
generally stipulate the age of marriage to be 18 years for marriages conducted under those
statutes.72
However, the most definitive provision on the age of marriage is in the Children Act,
2001.73 Section 14 provides for protection of children from early marriage, female circumcision
and other cultural rites, customs or traditional practices that are likely to negatively affect the child's life,
health, social welfare, dignity or physical or psychological development. Section 2 defines early
marriage as marriage or cohabitation with a child. Under the same section a ‘child’ is defined as
any human being under the age of 18 years. This effectively prohibits the marriage of persons
under the age of 18 even where such a person is contracting a marriage under custom. There is
thus a conflict between the provisions of the Children Act and the applicable customary rule and
practice. One way of dealing with the above conflict would be to appeal to the provisions of
section 3 (2) of the Judicature Act which provides that customary law is not applicable where it
is inconsistent with written law. Hence customary law (unwritten law) could be held to be
subject to the Children Act (written law).
The new Constitution of 2010 provides that every adult has the right to marry a person of
the opposite sex, based on the free consent of the parties. The reference to “adult” means that
only persons who have attained 18 years of age have the right to marry, effectively excluding
marriage of minors. Such marriage is based on the free consent of the parties, this outlaws
marriages where one of the parties is forced to marry, as happens in marriages involving young
girls.
7.3 Maintenance
Under the Subordinate Courts (Separation and Maintenance) Act74 a woman is entitled to
maintenance for herself and her children upon separation from her husband. However, the Act
expressly states that its provisions shall apply only to persons who have contracted monogamous
relationships under the prevailing marriage statutes.75 Customary marriages are therefore outside
72 However, it should be noted that both statutes nevertheless contemplate marriages of persons below 18 providedthere is written consent form a parent or guardian, or in the alternative from a minister of religion, judge or registrar
(see ss. 19 and 21, Cap. 150 and s. 8, Cap. 151).73 No. 8 of 2001.74 Cap. 153.75 See section 15, Cap. 153.
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the scope of the Act. This provision bars women in customary marriages from applying for
maintenance and effectively results in discrimination against such women.
It should be noted that under customary law generally, a woman is not entitled to
maintenance from her husband upon separation or divorce, as she is expected to return to her
natal family and obtain maintenance from there. Similarly, custody of children is under
customary law expected to be exercised by the father; hence a women with actual custody of her
children does not under customary law receive maintenance from the children’s father.
7.4 Cohabitation
Cohabitation refers to the practice where a man and a woman live together in a conjugal union
without formalizing the union under any of the four systems of marriage. Due to socio-economic
changes, there has been growing informality in marital relationships and a rise in the number of
cohabitation relationships. Often, parties engage in long periods of cohabitation and procreation
before they have a wedding, if ever, and bridewealth is normally paid over a period of time. This
is in keeping with the processual nature of African customary marriage, where marriage is not
usually viewed as a single event but as consisting of different phases. Cohabitation is often the
start of a process that may eventually culminate in a marriage proper, whether customary or
statutory.
Variously described as “living together”, “come we stay”, or “trial marriage”,
cohabitation relationships traverse and defy conventional categorizations of family law systems.
Kenyan statute law is silent on the issue of cohabitation. However, Kenyan courts have the
power to make a legal “presumption of marriage” whereby the relationship is treated for all
intents and purposes as a marriage, with all the attendant legal consequences.76 In Yawe v.
Public Trustee,77 the court held that the presumption of marriage may be applied to customary
marriages.
In Kenya, there is an intricate connection between cohabitation, customary marriage and
presumption of marriage. As customary marriages are not registrable it is usually a question of
fact, proved by oral evidence, whether parties who are cohabiting are married under custom or
not. The question of how a relationship is defined is important as it has distributive
consequences. For instance, the issue of whether a woman is entitled to maintenance and
76 The common law presumption of marriage has been applied by virtue of section 3 (1) of the Judicature Act which
provides for the common law of England as a source of law in Kenya. See Yawe v. Public Trustee (Civil Appeal No.
13 of 1976).77 Civil Appeal No. 13 of 1976 (unreported).
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custody of children will depend on whether or not she is deemed to be married. Hence the
presumption of marriage is usually invoked in cases where one party asserts the existence of a
customary marriage, while the other party denies it. Usually the party denying the existence of a
customary marriage argues that the requisite formalities or rituals were not performed, and that
therefore the relationship has no legal status.78
In the past the courts’ approach has been to insist that all the requisite formalities for
customary marriage must have been fulfilled before making a declaration of marriage. Courts
often relied on Cotran’s Restatements of Marriage and Divorce. A good examples is Case v.
Ruguru79 where it was held that no marriage subsisted between the two people as ngurario, a
ceremony involving the slaughtering of a ram under the applicable customary law, had not been
performed in accordance with custom. The courts’ stringent approach has been detrimental to
women in cohabitation relationships as it has meant that such women could not avail themselves
of the benefits of marriage, such as the right to inheritance of their husbands’ estates, a share in
the matrimonial property or maintenance from their husbands.
However, there has been a more recent trend, starting from 1976 in Yawe v. Public
Trustee80 where courts have been more willing to apply the presumption of marriage to
cohabitation relationships even where the requirements for customary marriage have not been
met. For instance, in Adongo v. Adongo81, the court applied the presumption of marriage in order
to hold that a woman in a cohabitation relationship was married to the deceased and as such was
a wife for purposes of the Act, thereby enabling the woman to have a share of the deceased’s
estate. However, while the courts’ change in attitude is laudable, the absence of clear legal
provisions regarding the application of the presumption means that women still have to rely on
judicial discretion, which is changeable and hence unreliable.
There is need to establish a system for registration of customary marriage, so that
women’s status in customary marriage may be clear. There should also be statutory provisions
for application of the presumption of marriage after a prescribed period, e.g. two years, in order
to minimize the uncertainty as to whether a person is married or not. These reforms have been
proposed in the current Marriage Bill of 2007.
78 See for instance Zepporah Wairimu v. Paul Muchemi (Civil Case No. 1280 of 1970) [unreported]; reprinted in
Eugene Cotran, Casebook on Kenya Customary Law (Nairobi: Professional Books Limited, 1987) 52 [Casebook ].79 [1970] E.A. 55.80 Civil Appeal No. 13 of 1976 (unreported).81 Cite. 2006
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7.5 Divorce
Under customary law in most African communities, marriage was viewed as the union, not just
of two individuals, but of two families and clans. The preservation of marriage was therefore of
supreme importance, and divorce was discouraged and made difficult. Divorce was also not
desirable as it meant that the wife’s family had to return bridewealth to the husband’s family. In
customary law relating to divorce, women are disadvantaged relative to men. First, while there
is a whole array of grounds upon which a man may divorce his wife, such as infidelity,
insubordination, childlessness, or misbehavior, a woman can only cite cruelty and failure to
maintain as grounds for divorce. Upon divorce, the woman is not entitled to custody of the
children, who remain with the father’s family. The woman is also not entitled to maintenance
from her husband, as it is expected that she will return to her natal family, who are supposed to
provide her with maintenance.
However, such assumptions are untenable in light of modern day realities as there is
usually no land or resources available for the woman when she returns to her natal family.
Divorced women are usually often left to fend for themselves. As separation and divorce usually
occur in the context of domestic violence, where the woman and the children are often thrown
out by an abusive husband, the woman usually has no choice but to take care of the children
singlehandedly.
7.6 Matrimonial Property
The main problem in Kenya relating to women’s rights to matrimonial property upon divorce is
that the law on this subject is grossly inadequate. Parliament has not enacted comprehensive
legislation to deal with the division or allocation of property between spouses at the dissolution
of marriage. Due to this lacuna, the Kenyan judiciary has resorted to the use of an old English
statute, the Married Women’s Property Act, 1882 (MWPA). This Act is a procedural (rather
than substantive) law that recognizes a married woman’s capacity to hold property in her own
right and transact in it.82 Section 17 of the MWPA provides that “in any question between
husband and wife as to the title or possession of property, either of them may apply to the High
court or a county court and the judge may make such order with respect to property in dispute …
as he thinks fit”. Kenyan Courts have innovatively interpreted this section of the MWPA to
develop rich jurisprudence in the division of matrimonial property between husband and wife.
82 This changed the common law position where a married woman’s legal identity was subsumed into her husband,and hence she had no capacity to hold property in her own right.
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The case of I v. I 83 was the first to establish that the MWPA was applicable to marriages
solemnized in Kenya. The respondent had sought a declaration under S 17 of the MWPA
claiming a half share in the proceeds of the sale of a house that the parties held in joint
registration. The applicant husband objected to the application of the Act in determining the
parties’ respective interests in the proceeds. He relied on the proviso in section 3 (1) in the
Judicature Act (reception clause) which states that English law shall apply only in so far as the
circumstances in Kenya permitted. The court observed that the circumstances of Kenya and its
inhabitants do not generally require that a woman should not be able to own property.
In Karanja v. Karanja84 the High Court confirmed that the MWPA was a statute of
general application which could apply to a marriage solemnized under customary law. The court
was therefore prepared to impute a trust in favour of the wife in respect of matrimonial property
whose acquisition which she had contributed to indirectly through payments for household and
other goods.
However, the continued use of the MWPA, is unsatisfactory for various reasons. Quite
apart from its antiquity, the Act is inadequate as it contains no substantive provisions relating to
matrimonial property. For instance, there is no definition of matrimonial property, neither are
there any clear guidelines about the rules or principles to be used in apportioning matrimonial
property. Matters are left entirely to the judge’s discretion. The question of the wife’s
contribution, direct or indirect, monetary or non-monetary, has usually been in issue.
In Kenya, the courts’ interpretation of these issues has been inconsistent. For instance, in
Karanja v. Karanja, the wife’s indirect contribution through purchase of household items with
her salary was taken as giving rise to an imputation of a trust in her favour. As already
mentioned, this case is also important as it applied the MWPA to a customary marriage. In
Kivuitu v. Kivuitu 85 (decided in 1991) the court went even further to hold that a woman’s
indirect contribution, both monetary and non-monetary (through wifely duties) were sufficient to
entitle her to a share of family property. The encouraging trend was continued in Nderitu v.
Nderitu86where the Court awarded 50% share of the matrimonial property to the wife.
83 [1971] E.A. 278.84 [1976] K.L.R. 307.85 [1985] L.L.R. 1411 (Court of Appeal).86 [1997] L.L.R. 606 (Court of Appeal).
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However, the gains made in these cases were reversed in Kimani Vs. Kimani Njoroge87
which held that there must be strict proof of monetary contribution and that no presumption of a trust
should be made. The reversal of gains continued in Echarya v. Echarya (2007) where the court
disregarded unpaid contribution to a marital household, such as childbirth, childcare, cleaning,
and agricultural labor, in dividing matrimonial property at divorce. The court’s insistence on
proof of monetary contribution is onerous for women, particularly those in rural areas who are not in
salaried employment but whose work in tilling land and rearing livestock, though difficult to quantify
in monetary terms, is nevertheless significant.
A further problem for women in customary marriages is that in order to bring themselves
within the ambit of the MWPA, they have to prove that they are married. In the absence of a
marriage certificate, as their marriages are not registered, this is a difficult task and unduly puts
them at a disadvantage in comparison with women married under statutory law. There is also the
cultural assumption in customary law that women cannot own property, particularly land.
All of this points to the need for clear legislation on these matters. The proposedMatrimonial Property Bill, 2007 seeks to introduce substantive law and clear guidelines on
apportionment and distribution of matrimonial property. Article 45 (3) of the Constitution of
2010 that recognizes equal rights of the parties to a marriage at all stages, including dissolution,
will hopefully give impetus to legislative reform in this area.
7.7 Succession
Kenya’s law of succession is characterized by plurality. Currently, there are three regimes of
succession law that apply in Kenya, namely statutory law, customary law, and Islamic law.88 The
main challenges relating to women’s rights arise from the conflict of such laws and the divergent
applications of customary law in succession matters. It should be noted that the law of
succession is intricately connected to the law of marriage and divorce and property law in
general. Hence, conflict in these areas are likely to affect the application of the law of
succession.
In colonial times, there were separate regimes of succession depending on the race and religion of
the individual concerned. Generally speaking, Africans were subject to customary law (even where they
87 1997] L.L.R. 553 (Court of Appeal). The Appeal Court remitted the case for fresh hearing by the High Court as
the trial judge had exhibited manifest bias against women.88 Islamic law of succession is applied by virtue of the Mohammed Marriage, Divorce and Inheritance Act (Cap.
156). Under this Act, the Kadhis’ courts have jurisdiction to deal with any disputes between Muslims relating
matters of inheritance, among other personal law matters. Islamic law of succession is beyond the scope of this paper.
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had converted to Christianity and married under statute), Europeans were subject to statutory law, while
Muslims and Hindus were governed by their respective religious laws. Under customary law in
Kenya, succession of property is patrilineal, that is through the male line.89 The main features of
customary law of inheritance include communal holding of land and property, supremacy of
males (particularly the eldest son), and general exclusion of women from inheriting, particularly
land. Customary law is characterized by patriarchal relations which, when interconnected with
capitalism (for instance the individualization of title to land), has resulted in the general
exclusion of women from inheritance, particularly that of land.
Traditionally men owned land and livestock while women could only own movable
assets, such as cooking utensils and farming implements. The general rule is that a man’s
property is distributed equally among his sons. Daughters do not inherit any property from their
father, as it is expected that they will get married and enjoy the property of their husband.
Unmarried daughters may obtain cultivation rights over a portion of land, but on their marriage
or death, such land would be taken over by their brothers. Where a man has only daughters andno sons, his property is divided up amongst his brothers. Widows have a right to be maintained
and to use part of the deceased’s land for their own needs during their lifetime, but they do not
have absolute rights to the property and such rights cease upon their remarriage. There is also the
idea that women are themselves property to be owned, rather than legal subjects who can own
property in their own right.90 In many Kenyan communities, there is the practice of levirate
marriage where, upon a husband’s death, the widow gets married to the deceased’s brother. This
is done in order to perpetuate the deceased’s line and to provide for maintenance of the widow
and the deceased’s children.
However, there is some indication of changes in customary norms and practices over time
to accommodate new realities. There are therefore examples of changes in customary practices
that allow women to inherit land, for instance in Murang’a District in central Kenya. 91 Research
also shows a growing acceptance that an unmarried woman may in some cases inherit from her
father, particularly where a daughter have been taking care of her father in his old age92.
89 Most of the ethnic communities of Kenya are patrilineal, with a few exceptions such as the Digo and Duruma.
However, even these have shifted towards patrilineage as a result of contact with Islam.90 Patricia Kameri-Mbote, “Gender Dimension of Law, Colonialism and Inheritance in East Africa: Kenyan
Women’s Experiences”, IELRC Working Paper 2001 (last accessed on
30th December 2010).91 McKenzie, supra note 22..92 Nyamu, Property Relations, supra note 21.
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In 1968, the Commission on the Law of Succession recommended that there should be a
uniform law of succession. Pursuant to the Commission’s recommendations, a Law of
Succession Act93 was passed in 1978 which came into operation in 1981. This law sought to
unify the different systems of succession, and was intended to apply to all people in Kenya
irrespective of race or religion. Another goal of the Act was to promote the equal status of
women in Kenyan society.
The Act is based on English principles of succession and deals with both testate and
intestate succession. It proceeds on the assumption of individual ownership of property, the right
of a spouse to succeed to the deceased’s estate, and equality of male and female children on
succession irrespective of their marital status. Thus the Act does not make a distinction between
the rights of sons and daughters to inherit their parents’ estates, whether comprising movable or
immovable property. This goes counter to the assumption in customary law that women do not
generally own or inherit land and that daughters (particularly married ones) do not inherit their
father’s estate. The Act therefore seeks to be gender-neutral in its application. 94
Section 2 (1) of the Act categorically states that, except as otherwise expressly provided
in the Act, the provisions of the Act shall have universal application to all cases of testate and
intestate succession to the estates of persons dying after the commencement of the Act.95
However, though the Act was intended to provide for a uniform system of succession, in reality
this did not happen. In 1991 Muslims were exempted from the application of the Act96 on the
argument that the Act embodied secular principles which were contrary to Islamic teachings
contained in the Koran and, further, that succession for Muslims was already adequately
regulated under the Koran.97 Further, certain geographical regions are exempted from the
application of the Act in relation to intestate succession of agricultural land and livestock;
customary law is the applicable law for those regions.98 Tthe Act also provides that a person
when making a will is at liberty to indicate that his or her estate will be governed by customary
93 Cap. 160.94 However, there is differential treatment of widows and widowers in section 35 of the Act. While widows acquireonly a life interest in the property of their deceased husbands, widowers acquire an absolute interest, which they cantransfer and also pass on through inheritance. In addition, a widow loses her life interest in the property if she
remarries. A widower continues to enjoy the inheritance regardless of his marital status.95 The substantive provisions of the Act do not apply to persons who died before the coming into operation of Act.96 Vide L.N. 21 of 1990.97 This source of law is based on the teachings of the Quran. Under the Mohammedan Marriage, Divorce andInheritance Act (Chapter 156), the Kadhi’s courts have jurisdiction to deal with any disputes between Muslims
relating matters of inheritance, among other personal law matters.98 Vide s. 32. These areas include Wajir, West Pokot, Turkana, Tana River, Kajiado, Garissa, Marsabit, Isiolo,
Mandera and Lamu. In general, the people living in these gazetted areas adhere to their traditional way of life to alarge extent.
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or religious law. Thus the Act reserves the application of customary law in certain situations.
The Act also gives recognition to certain aspects